Syrena
Enchanted.
The Overnight Train
It was raining.
The yellow glow of streetlamps dulled in the watery mist, blurring into indistinct balls of color and casting odd shadows against the pale wallpaper in the office. Juliet Parker listened to the gentle pitter-patter of rain against the glass windows and carefully adjusted the penlight in her mouth. Mismatched shades of darkness dripped off the biometric safe.
Plastic coated wires leaked out of a gaping hole in the safe door, shinning brightly under the glare of the penlight. Juliet carefully refitted the individual wires into the fingerprint scanner. The scanner’s LED light flickered on with a sickly green spark once she attached the final wire.
She pushed the fingerprint scanner into the hole. The bulge of copper wires provided sharp resistance, but the scanner clicked perfectly into place. Juliet sighed around the penlight and stood. Her muscles cramped at the change in posture. She groaned and stretched halfheartedly, pulling the penlight out of her mouth.
Warm spittle dripped down the slim piece of metal circuitry and oozed over her gloved fingers. Juliet grimaced, clicking the light off and instinctively wiping her fingers clean on her pants. The black mesh fabric easily absorbed the excess moisture. She dropped the penlight into her bag and slung the thin strap over her shoulder.
Her tools clanged together. But the fabric and hum of the reception computer muffled the noise. She stepped into the hall and paused near the back door. The computer’s screensaver, a motley collection of floating bubbles, provided enough light to see the dismantled alarm box.
The thick, off-white plastic cover hung near the ground, swaying precariously, and left the wires and motherboard exposed. Juliet worked one of the motherboards free. She unhooked two of the wires. The green LED on the alarm stopped glowing. It blinked.
Juliet quickly inserted the original motherboard. The LED light blinked red once and resumed a steady green glow. But the pause in the alarm feedback was already devastating. In twenty-two minutes and thirteen seconds the police would be at the door, searching for signs of tampering. She reattached the off-white cover out of habit.